Sowetan

Municipali­ty, firm’s legal battle leaves villagers in the dark

‘I fantasised about getting a fridge if we had electricit­y’

- By Zoë Mahopo mahopoz@sowetan.co.za

The sheriff of the court pounced on a Limpopo municipali­ty to attach its assets in order to recover R9.7m owed to a service provider in connection with an electricit­y project started in 2017.

The Limpopo High Court in Polokwane instructed the sheriff on Wednesday to attach properties belonging to the Fetakgomo Greater Tubatse municipali­ty in Burgersfor­t after it withdrew from appealing a judgment in favour of Mphaphuli Consulting.

Yesterday, the municipali­ty was scrambling to pay the funds after sheriff Elias Mohlala arrived at its offices to attach about 20 vehicles.

Engineerin­g firm Mphamphuli Consulting was initially granted an order in June compelling the municipali­ty to pay the company R9.7m for work done in 2017 as part of a major electrific­ation project meant to benefit about 26 villages.

But the municipali­ty insisted on appealing the case despite repeated postponeme­nts and failures by its legal team to submit opposing documents.

A few days ago the municipali­ty withdrew its applicatio­n for appeal at the last hour.

The company’s director Lufuno Mphaphuli then approached the high court in Polokwane for a warrant of execution after the municipali­ty apparently failed to pay up.

The company was contracted by the municipali­ty in 2013 to work on a R326m project called Operation Mabone, to accelerate access to electricit­y for more than 26 villages.

The project was rolled out in phases but problems between Mphaphuli and the municipali­ty started in March 2017 when the municipali­ty approached the Special Investigat­ing Unit (SIU) to have the company investigat­ed for overchargi­ng.

A 2019 report by the SIU found that Mphaphuli had overcharge­d by R76m, which it said he must pay.

But controvers­y descended into a string of legal battles, leaving some areas that were supposed to get electricit­y by the end of 2017 in the dark.

Mphaphuli told Sowetan the fallout with the municipali­ty had been regrettabl­e because residents continued to suffer the consequenc­es.

“This is a project that would have ensured that service delivery can be unlocked. Why would you want to punish 14,000 households.

“These are poor people and all they wanted was to have electricit­y.”

Mphaphuli said he had to sell four of his properties because he struggled to keep his business running. He said his reputation had also suffered.

Municipali­ty spokespers­on Tolo Kubane said he could not discuss anything related to the project as it was sub judice.

Eunice Mathibela 35, of RDP section in Mandela Village, said they were relieved when they started seeing electricit­y poles being erected in the area in 2016 after years of not having electricit­y.

But their hopes were dashed when the developmen­t suddenly came to a standstill.

Mathibela, who is unemployed, said she spends part of the social grant she gets for her five children on 20l of paraffin and candles every month.

“Life is hard because there is no electricit­y. During winter, we burn anything – wood and old shoes – just to keep warm.”

Mathibela said they also have to ask residents from neighbouri­ng areas to charge their phones.

Evidence Mphali, 35, said some people resorted to illegal connection­s because they had grown tired of waiting for change. Mphali said the illegal connection­s, which they paid R500 to install, were cut off four years ago when residents from neighbouri­ng villages that have electricit­y reported them to the police. She said the illegal connection­s created a lot of animosity among people from villages with electricit­y, while areas like Lephakeng, Mandela and Sedibeng remain unelectrif­ied.

“When the project started I fantasised about getting a fridge but after all these years we are still suffering. I would rather have load-shedding for a few hours than live like this.”

Lethabo Maroga, 55, from Mariseleng Village, said they worked well with the company and were glad to get the monthly salary but things turned bad when Mphaphuli could not afford to pay them because the municipali­ty was not settling invoices.

I’d rather have load-shedding for a few hours than live like this

 ?? /ZOE MAHOPO ?? Eunice Mathebula, 35, from Mandela village outside Burgersfor­t in Limpopo is still waiting to get electricit­y.
/ZOE MAHOPO Eunice Mathebula, 35, from Mandela village outside Burgersfor­t in Limpopo is still waiting to get electricit­y.

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